4.2 Article

Petrology, geochronology and emplacement model of the giant 1.37 Ga arcuate Lake Victoria Dyke Swarm on the margin of a large igneous province in eastern Africa

期刊

JOURNAL OF AFRICAN EARTH SCIENCES
卷 97, 期 -, 页码 273-296

出版社

PERGAMON-ELSEVIER SCIENCE LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.jafrearsci.2014.04.034

关键词

Mafic dykes; Swarm; Geochemistry; Absolute age; Mesoproterozoic; Uganda

资金

  1. Sustainable Management of Mineral Resources Project (SMMRP) in Uganda

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A comprehensive description of the petrography, geochemical composition, Sm-Nd data and intrinsic field relationships of a giant arcuate Mesoproterozoic mafic dyke swarm in SW Uganda is presented for the first time. The swarm is similar to 100 km wide and mainly hosted in the Palaeoproterozoic Rwenzori Belt between the Mesoproterozoic Karagwe-Ankole Belt and the Archaean Uganda Block. The dykes trend NW-SE across Uganda, but can be correlated across Lake Victoria to another set of arcuate aeromagnetic anomalies that continue southwards into Tanzania, resulting in a remarkably large semi-circular swarm with an outer diameter of similar to 500 km. We propose that this unique giant dyke structure be named the Lake Victoria Dyke Swarm (LVDS). The dykes are tholeiites with Mg numbers between 0.69 and 0.44, and with inherited marked negative Nb and P anomalies in spider diagrams. Two dykes provide Sm-Nd mineral ages of 1368 +/- 41 Ma and 1374 +/- 42 Ma, with initial epsilon Nd values of -2.3 and -3.2, and Sr-87/Sr-86 ratios of similar to 0.706-0.709. Geotectonic discrimination diagrams for the swarm exhibit more arc type than within-plate tectonic signatures, but this is in accordance with systematic enrichments in LREE, U and Th in the dolerites, more likely due to the involvement of the continental lithosphere during their petrogenesis. The LVDS is coeval with a regional similar to 1375 Ma bimodal magmatic event across nearby Burundi, Rwanda and NW Tanzania, which can collectively be viewed as a large igneous province (LIP). It also indicates that the nearby Karagwe-Ankole Belt sequences - bracketed between 1.78 and 1.37 Ga and assumed by some to have been deposited within intracratonic basins - were capped by flood basalts that have subsequently been removed by erosion. Different geochemical signatures (e.g. La-N/Sm-N) suggest that most of the arcuate swarm was derived from an enriched SCLM, whereas related intrusions in the centre of this semi-circular segment have more or less enriched asthenospheric mantle source signatures. A model of how the LIP configuration formed, and especially its giant arcuate swarm, requires fortuitous pre-existing structures, an unusually large sub-crustal magma chamber, and/or some very intrinsic rift process. The LIP is apparently related to a global 1.4-1.2 Ga rifting event that led to the break-up of the Columbia/Nuna supercontinent. (C) 2014 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.

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